(*Portrait and bio taken with permission from Michael Sullís Spencerian Script and Ornamental Penmanship, Volume
I.)

Francis B. Courtney

(1867-1952)

Known as
"The Pen Wizard" by his peers, Francis B. Courtney was truly unique
among penmen. As a student at age 17 of AH Hinman,
the grand old master and student of PR Spencer, Courtney developed his passion
for penmanship early in life. Shortly thereafter, he received further training
in penmanship at the SpencerianBusinessCollege, Cleveland, Ohio.

His
first position after graduation was as an accountant in a manufacturing
company, which he held for two years. However, preferring to work in a business
college environment rather than in a general office, Courtney wrote 200 single
page specimens, each line being in a different style, and sent them out to business
colleges throughout the country This brought him many job offers, and his
reputation as a penman grew rapidly. Over the years, he taught at many such
colleges: Hinman's College, Worcester, Massachusetts; Portland, Maine Business
College; Lincoln, Nebraska Business
College; Spaulding's Commercial College, Kansas City, Missouri; McDonaldBusinessCollege, Des Moines, Iowa;

Caton's Commercial College, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Wood's School
of Business, New York; Cedar Rapids Business College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; and Toland's Business University He was one of the most
consistent contributors to the Penman's Art Journal, the
American Penman and the Business Educator, and was very prolific in his
personal correspondence with his friends and colleagues.

No other
penman was so versatile in various writing styles as Francis B. Courtney. He
was most flamboyant in the penmanship demonstrations he gave, and he exhibited
his prowess with the pen often. He seemed to revel in dashing out exotic and
novel forms of decorative writing, a number of which were of his own creation.
His Needlestitch script, Courtney's Backslanted script, Figure Writing, and Letterheads became
trademarks for this great penman. Throughout his long life, he was an avid
teacher, and influenced many young writers with his flawless work. He died at
85 years of age in 1952.